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Men are under pressure to conform to the "ideal" body image, says the charity Beat

Young men with an eating disorder are not getting the help and support they need because of a perceptions about a "women's illness", say researchers.

Men are underdiagnosed and undertreated for anorexia and other eating disorders, despite making up about a quarter of cases, a UK study suggests.

Frontline health workers have a key role in identifying eating disorders in young men, they report in BMJ Open.

Men are under pressure to have the "ideal" body image, says a charity.

Researchers from the University of Oxford and University of Glasgow interviewed 39 young people aged 16 to 25, including 10 men, about their experiences of diagnosis, treatment and support for eating disorders.

There is more pressure on men from magazines with celebrities and male models to have the 'ideal' body imageLeanne Thorndyke , Beat eating disorders charity

They say young men with eating disorders were "underdiagnosed, undertreated and underresearched".

This is partly because the men themselves were unaware of the symptoms, despite purging, not eating for days or obsessive calorie counting, they said.

"Our findings suggest that men may experience particular problems in recognising that they may have an eating disorder as a result of the continuing cultural construction of eating disorders as uniquely or predominantly a female problem," said Dr Ulla Raisanen and Dr Kate Hunt.

One man said he thought eating disorders only affected "fragile teenage girls"; another said he thought eating disorders were "something girls got"; while one was told by his doctor to "man up".

Others said they often had to wait a long time for specialist referral and had sometimes been misdiagnosed.

GPs and other professionals such as teachers have a key role in improving the outlook for men with eating disorders by challenging misconceptions, the researchers said.

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Some of the men weighed themselves excessively

And men themselves needed the courage to "speak up to somebody and contact a health professional to tell them what is going on", Dr Raisanen added.